Metabolic risk factors and posttraumatic stress disorder: the role of sleep in young, healthy adults.

Autor: Talbot LS; From the San Francisco VA Medical Center (Talbot, Rao, Cohen, Richards, Inslicht, O'Donovan, Maguen, Metzler, Neylan), San Francisco, California; and Departments of Medicine (Rao, Cohen) and Psychiatry (Talbot, Richards, Inslicht, O'Donovan, Maguen, Neylan), University of California, San Francisco, California., Rao MN, Cohen BE, Richards A, Inslicht SS, OʼDonovan A, Maguen S, Metzler TJ, Neylan TC
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Psychosomatic medicine [Psychosom Med] 2015 May; Vol. 77 (4), pp. 383-91.
DOI: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000176
Abstrakt: Objective: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is associated with indicators of poor physical health and sleep disturbance. This study investigated the relationship between PTSD and metabolic risk factors and examined the role of sleep duration in medically healthy and medication-free adults.
Methods: Participants with PTSD (n = 44, mean age = 30.6 years) and control participants free of lifetime psychiatric history (n = 50, mean age = 30.3 years) recorded sleep using sleep diary for 10 nights and actigraphy for 7 nights. We assessed metabolic risk factors including fasting triglycerides, total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, as well as abdominal fat using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry.
Results: PTSD was associated with shorter sleep duration (based on self-report, not actigraphy) and higher metabolic risks (controlling for body fat percentage), including increased triglycerides (p = .03), total cholesterol (p < .001), LDL cholesterol (p = .006), very low density lipoprotein cholesterol (p = .002), and cholesterol/high-density lipoprotein ratio (p = .024). In addition, sleep duration was associated with metabolic risks in PTSD (significant correlations ranged from r = -0.20 to r = -0.40) but did not fully account for the association between PTSD and metabolic measures.
Conclusions: Metabolic risk factors are associated with PTSD even in early adulthood, which highlights the need for early intervention. Future longitudinal research should assess whether sleep disturbance in PTSD is a mechanism that contributes to heightened metabolic risk to elucidate the pathway from PTSD to higher rates of medical disorders such as obesity, diabetes, and heart disease.
Databáze: MEDLINE